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CD Burner for my quadra?

wanderingjew

Well-known member
I'm just wondering if they exist. It sure would speed up my protools sessions. I'm running 7.6.1, Quadra 700, 68Megs ram.

Did one exist? Is the burner software even usable?

 

Danamania

Official 68k Muse
Ayup, external SCSI ones work fine with toast, I've used a couple. A Quadra 950 I used with a LaCie one had no problems burning at 8x.

Dana

 

TheNeil

Well-known member
I managed to find an internal SCSI CD-RW drive and my Quadra 840 was more than happy to take it. Then as Dana says, Toast is your friend...

 

Unknown_K

Well-known member
Some versions of Toast might need updates to support your particular SCSI burner, I had to get an update for 3.5? to use a Teac 8x CDR drive from what I remember.

I have burned disks from a IIfx, so you don't even need a Quadra class machine for that.

 

tomlee59

Well-known member
Just fyi, even a Mac II can handle a burner. As long as there's an '020 or better under the hood/bonnet, you can burn away, although maybe not faster than 1x with the oldest machines...

 

Unknown_K

Well-known member
Speed only depends on how fast the internal SCSI bus and HD are since the CPU doesn't need to be bothered with SCSI transfers unlike with old IDE.

You should be able to do 1MB+ on most 68020+ systems, 8x cdr is 1.2MB/sec I think (150Kb/sec per X).

 

tomlee59

Well-known member
Speed only depends on how fast the internal SCSI bus and HD are since the CPU doesn't need to be bothered with SCSI transfers unlike with old IDE.
You should be able to do 1MB+ on most 68020+ systems, 8x cdr is 1.2MB/sec I think (150Kb/sec per X).
Regrettably, data trumps your optimism. There's more than simple bus speed to consider -- there still is the question of driver interaction. Without SCSI Manager 4.3, burning faster than 2x is impractical. I am not speaking theoretically -- I have the coasters to prove it. :(

 

Cory5412

Daring Pioneer of the Future
Staff member
I tend to burn at 1 or 2x anyway, even on my brand new computers, but a lot of that is because I can be doing other things while the burn occurs.

 

tomlee59

Well-known member
My point is simply that knowing bus speed is not sufficient to deduce possible burn speeds. It only sets an upper bound. Generalizing from the exceptional case of the IIfx can't be relied upon to provide good guidance for other members of the Mac II family.

 

Unknown_K

Well-known member
A CDR costs less then a buck, won't kill you to try it out I guess. What machine did you use that could not do more then 2X? I have IIcx, IIci, IIsi to experiment with.

 

tomlee59

Well-known member
I recall having tried pretty much all of those at one time or another. I had an overclocked IIsi set up for a long time burning audio CDs. Going faster than 2x led to coaster creation. If you've got the time and inclination, I'd love to hear what you discover. And if you have a CDRW disc hanging around, you can keep some coasters out of the landfill...

I've also burned CDs with an SE/30. I no longer remember if I could even burn faster than 1x, but I'm certain that faster than 2x was a no-go.

My PB540c also can't handle burning beyond 2x. Apparently, that's entirely to be expected:

http://www.fortunecity.com/skyscraper/seagate/536/burningcds.html

There's also a nice discussion of SCSI Manager 4.3 (and how it differs from what went before) at

http://www.overnet.de/hhp/mte/manual/scsi_on_mac3.html

That author points out that the IIfx is indeed a special case (because of its support of SCSI DMA), which is why you were able to burn at 6x (*most* impressive!).

 
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